16 PAGES TODAY SHELBY, N. C. FRIDAY, OCT. 25, 1929. Published Monday, Wednesday and Friday Afternoons man, per year (in advance) taiio VOL. XXXV, No. 127 I ~LATENEWS THE MARKET. Cotton, per lb. .. 17 V*c j Cotton Seed, per bu._.... 40' jc j _ Fair And Cool. Today's North Carolina Weather Report: Fair and continued cool to I night. Light to heavy frost in in terior Saturday. Fair and slowly rhlng temperature in central and west portions. Her Mother Dead. Mrs. Lemira Goodhue, mother of Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, wife of the former president, died last night at the Cooiey-Dickinson hospital at Northampton, Mass. Hazing At High ' School Here In i Collegiate Style i Toung Eighth Graders At Central i High Paddled This Year As Freshmen. Shelby’s Central high school took on collegiate airs this ytar, accord ing to reports emanating from the 1 school campus, and decided that freshmen at the school—boys com ing up from the grammar grades — should be properly Initiated into the high school brotherhood just as freshmen are taken in at college. The new system, kiiown in col lege circles as hazing, worked very well, it is understood, other than proving a bit uncomfortable to the new boys, until school authorities got wind of the embryo hazing and i immediately exercised their author ity by putting a stop to the new > custom. Several Got Paddled. Before information of the hazing reached school authorities several of the new boys in high school ! coming up from the seventh grade or the several granunar schools in the city, received, Reports have it, warm receptions/to their new school quarters—said Reception being ten dered with cleverly constructed lit tle paddles from local lumberyards. No Severe Treatment. None of the hazing formula prov ed very severe, it Is understood, and the Central fresh youngsters “took . their medicine like men” and re fused to squeal, and the new col legiate atmosphere enveloping the oM Central campus may never have reached the ears of school officials had not one of them happened up on several paddles—paddles with boles in them—about the school! budding. This find led to ocher things, and eventually to the end of the hazing program—which at the time might have already reached an end, as boys about the campus, who talk reluctantly, say that the j hazing period lasted only three days after which the new boys were * accepted as regular fellows. Deputy Out Hunting,. Nabs Fighting Blacks Deputy Sheriff Bob Kendrick, as • coinpanied by Joe Carroll, captain of the Shelby fire department, start ed out on a ’possum hunt fact night and returned in less than an hour with a catch of three colored men and three colored women, all of whom were jailed on a charge of fighting. Near Hickory creek, south of town, the deputy says a car parked by the side of the road while in front, under the lights, the colored sextet was staging a free-for-a'l. Those Jailed were Broadus Edwards, Odus Hamrick, Cletus Petty, Gertte , Reynolds and Willie Gaskin, of Gaffney, and Maud McDowell, of Shelby. Fire At Barber Shop South Shelby Today The city fire trucks were called out shortly before nine o’clock thiE morning to the Reinhart barber shop in South Shelby where a * small fire had started about the flue. The blaze was extinguished with only a small damage. You Can Pay When, Due-If You Keep A BUDGET There Is no secret about how to pay bills promptly and keep your credit and self-respect. Make someone in your house ihc one to pay bills—nun or wife. Figure possible expenses the first of each month for the next 311 days against what the family in come will be. The person who pays the Mila should see that the expenses are kept within that limit. Then when the bills come In they can be paid cheerfully and promptly. That’s the only way to peace of mind, safety and suocess. PAT THE BILLS PROMPTLV Gardner Likely Never To Seek An Office Again Tells Guilford Farmers That lie May Never Be Candidate In State Any More. The offiee of chief executive of North Carolina will likely be the last public offiee Govemr O. Max Gardner, of Shelby, who has been in politics since early manhood, will ever seek. During his campaign for gov ernor he intimated that at the end of his term he would be through with public life, and speaking yesterday to an as semblage of Guilford county farmers, at Summerfield near Greensboro, he reiterated the statement. Through With It. "I I know my mind,” The Greens boro News quoted him as saying, “and I think I do, I shall never be a candidate for public office in North Carolina again.” Continuing The News said: “He made no explanation nor discussed it further with his rural friends who remained standing during more than a half hour to hear every word he uttered.” Since he is still comparatively young for a man in public life thero were many who thought at the time of his first statement that the governor might change his mind and remain in public life, but a repetition of his statement yester day leaves the impression that the man who held his first public of fice at 28 and is today in North Carolina's highest office has tired of official life. Rutherford Jurors For Marion Hearin Rutherfordton.—Sheriff W. C. Hardin has summoned 100 persons in Rutherford county to appear a: Marion for the special te?m of court which is to be held there beginning November 11, when 119 persons ire due to be arraigned for alleged crimes growing out of the recent textile strikes in that place. Judge G. V. Cowper. of Kinston, will pre side. Alfred Hoffman, southern organi zer for the United Textile Workers of America, and five strikers were being tried in September when one of the prisoners escaped from jail in Marion and the trial was post poned. Hoffman and the strikers are charged with rioting and in citing to rebellion on August 30. 1929, also on a charge of conspiracy against the state. Eight deputy and special deputy sheriffs Will be tried for murder. The officers to face this charge are Robert Ward, B. L. Rob bins, Taylor Greene, Charles Tate, W. A. Fender, Jim Owens, Dave Jarrett and William Twiggs. Fifty four people will be charged with rioting and inciting to rebellion: 37 will be charged with rioting, assault on officers, unlawfully assembling, breach of peace and resisting arrest while 17 are charged with an as sault with a deadly weapon and lour will be charged with exploding dyn amite. Padgett Speaks For Rotary Club Meeting Rev. Rush Padgett, pastor of the Second Baptist church, was the speaker at today’s luncheon of the Shelby Rotary club with Mr. Jnrk Dover in charge of the program. Rev. Mr. Padgett discussed the need for business men to show .more interest and give more time to such public institutions as the churches, the schools, and the gov ernment. Bethlehem Booth At Cleveland County Fair T The booth above, entered by the progressive Bethlehem community was one of the outstanding farm-life ex hibits at the recent Cleveland County Fair, which this year lead all county fairs in the state in attendance and sire. Charlotte Observer Photo City Not Responsible For Small Water Main To Hotel At Cleveland Springs, He Says Seniors Above The Average In State In Their Examinations, However, They Are Below Schools Of Like Size. tn the High school examination by seniors ■ in the 1929 class, the score was 08.2 which was above the average for all of the high school of the state. While the local school was above the average for the state, it was below the average of schools of similar size which made a grade of 76, according to figures furnish ed by Supt. B. L, Smith. It is gratifying also to note that improvement was shown over the previous year. The grade in 1928 was 78.6 as compared with the state average grade of 82.9. In’ the specific subjects for 1929 the Shelby school compared with the state average as follows: Read ing and study habits, state 16 3. Shelby same; reading and litera ture state 14.25, Shelby 16.8; English form, state 8.5, Shelby 9,9; histori-al reading, state 13.2, Shelby 13.9, mathematics, state 6.7, Shelby 5 2; general science, state 12.3; Shelby 11.2; American history, state 12.1 Shelby 12.7; Latin, state 9.1, Shelby 9.8; French state, 10.7, Shelby A. Mortons Back After Wreck Near Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Fred Morton, both of whom were injured in an au'o crash near Wilson last Saturday night, returned to their home here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Morton were en route to Wilson from the Carolina Georgia game at Chapel Hill wheu the wheels of their car caught on the shoulder of the paved road skidded into a brick wall and turn ed over. Both were painfully bruised while Mr. Morton received severe. 1 gashes about the head and body Their car was badly wrecked. Ninety Percent Of People Try Their Best To Pay Their Debts Three out of four people are fnn est, and at least ninety percent of the people around Shelby pay their debts—although some of them have to delay the payments until they get the wherewith. That's the opinion of Louis Ham rick, operator of a local pressing club and dry cleaning plant, who should know what he is talking about because he does his own col lecting and calls upon from 100 to 200 people monthly. "There are not as many out-and out deadbeats in the world—or, rather, around Shelby, a place I know what I’m talking about—as a lot of people seem to believe,” he says. "Out of all the bills I carry out each month, and the major portion of pressing dub work is credit work, I seldom find more than one or two people who actually try to beat me out of what they owe me. Of course I never collect 90 percent ef the debts each month, but that Is not because they’re trying to heat me, but because they do not nave the money at the time. They pay later, and it doesn't take a bill cot lector long to know when the man who cannot pay him means to pay or is trying to evade paying. Dur ing the recent summer when money was scarce there were many who could not pay, but they have been paying since, and will pay. “I believe other bill collectors will agree with me. The world isn't half as crooked as some would have us baiic. ba concluded. i . t”-JV j Former Alderman Say» Firemen Going Out Of Town As Favor Should Not Be Criticised. If it is indeed true that a six inch water main could not fur nish enough water so that Shelby firemen could success fully combat the fire at Cleve land Springs hold, it was no fault of the city of Shelby. That is the belief of T. W. Ham rick, former alderman and lo many years closely connected fhh affairs of the city. In a letter ad dressed to The Star, concerning a recent Star editorial regarding the fire, Mr. Hamrick says that the Cleveland Springs hotel company put in the six-inch main and not the city, and continues by saying that since the fire was without the city limit the firefighters of the Shelby fire department should be praised for their work instead of criticised. Explains About Water. The letter, which speaks tor it self, follows in full: “I don't know just who Is the proper person to answer your ques tions and comments on ThejCteve Iand Springs fire and the water mains of the town, so I beg leave to make a few remarks along that line: First, I want to call your atten tion to the fact that the Cleveland Springs development, is no part of Shelby. The city fire department has no more legal right to respond to a fire alarm from there than it has to respond to an alarm from Belwood or Casar. "Cleveland Springs is in the county. They own and put in their own water and light line, it is a private development, over which Shelby has no control. Shelby has a ten inch wrater line running to the old city lhpits. The Cleveland Springs company, attached their six inch line there and carried it to their development and they pay the town for water used. "The six inch line was put in for sanitary purposes and not for fire fighting, although in a small fire it might be of considerable service in-so-far as dwellings are concern ed, provided a w'ater hydrant is near enough to be available. Of ; course the fire dept, would at all times respond to any fire alarm from there and do what ever they could, because the town is und°r a moral obligation, if not a legal one I was at the Cleveland Springs fire, ^thirty minutes after the alarm sounded and the entire roof was a solid blaze. The fire department needed not only a ten inch main but a pressure great enough to throw six streams of water at least two hundred feet to have success fully fought the fire. The Cleveland Springs hotel was as large as the old Shelby hotel and you must re member that the firemen with plenty of pressure and plenty of water could not do more than con fine the fire to the one building. *T understand that our complete; fire fighting equipment responded to (Continued on Page Thirteen) Utility Wants To Buy Electric Plant At Boiling Springs < Election Is Called To Vote On Sale Of Plant November 26 For $11,500. Boiling Springs now lias up the matter of the sale of it* electric light plant to the Southern Public Utility company, a subsidiary of the Southern Power company for the sum of $i&500 and an election has been called by the officials of the town to be held November 26 at which time the citizens will decide whether or not they wish the plant sold or maintained under munici pal ownership. Ellenboro just over the line in Rutherford county sold its electric plant a few months ago to the Southern Public Utility company for $18,500, then Lattimore follow ed with an election which carried authorizing the sale of Its plant. Mooresboro has called an election to be held Wednesday, October 30 when the citizens will vote on the sale of the plant in that town and indications are that the election will carry. In the event Boiling Springs authorizes the sale of i‘s plant, and the Mooresboro election carries next Wednesday, the South ern Public Utilities company will have purchased four municipally owned electric plants in this arid Rutherford counties paying approx imately $70,000 for the four. Western Union Here Has Audit; Branton Back At Local Post _ Mr. R. R. Paris, auditor, traveling out of division auditors office, At lanta, Ga. audited the accounts of the local Western Union office this week. The audit resulted in a bal ance, and everything in good con dition. Mr. R. E. Blackwelder is manager of the local office. Mr. R. H. (Dick) Branton, relief manager for ths Western Union is back at the local office for a few weeks. For the past few months Mr. Branton has given relief fen vacations throughout the state. Just where his next relief will do is not known yet. Mr. Branton is a likeable fellow, making friends wherever he goes. — Peeler, Duke End, Former Star Here, Loses Teeth In Game Shelby High-Product Not To Start , Game Against Villanova Team Saturday. Melvin Peeler, once a star tackle and end at Shelby high and also a star baseball pitcher, will not start the game Saturday at his old end berth on the Duke university eleven against Villanova in Phila delphia. And, according to dis patches from Durham, there is a very good reason. In the game with Navy last Saturday at Annapolis young Peeler left several teeth on the play in 4 field as the result of blows in the mouth while tackling Navy bail carriers. Superior Court Starts Monday, Harding Judge Big Criminal Docket Scheduled To Be Disposed Of. Several Killing Cases. The fall term of superior court Will convene here Monday morning with Judge W. F Harding, of Char lotte. presiding and Solicitor Spur geon Spurltng, of Lenoir, prosecut ing. A heavy criminal docket Is to be disposed of according to Clerk of Court A. M. Hamrick. Hornburkle Trial. The criminal case which will like ly attract the most interest will be the trial of A. J. Hornburkle, well known boxer, who will face the court on the charge of murdering George Scruggs, a textile worker, in east Shelby last February. Two other killing affairs to be tried are the charges against Cliff FullenWlder, colored, for fatally shooting his brother-in-law at a negro church in the county some months bark, and the fatal assaut upon a negro man at Grover a cou ple of years ago. several young white men being Indicted in the lat ter case Miss Randall New Secretary To Grigg Young Girl Of Forest City, Native Of County Supcceds Mrs. Osborne. Muss Viola Randall, for several years connected with the Farmers Bank and Trust company at Forest City, has Accepted the position as I secretary to Prof. J. H, Grigg, sup erintendent of the Cleveland coun ty schools, and has already enter ed upon her duties. Miss RardaP, whose father lives In the Bcthlc htm sectio nof this county, (suc ceeds Mrs. Tom Osborne, who re cently tendered het resignation aft er capably filling the office for several years. The Forest City Courier in speak, ing of the change made by Miss Randall said that she had made o host of friends there In social nud business circles who would wish licr success in her new position. Fall Business On Up-grade In Shelby First National Deposits In A Single Day Amount To $423,00(1. Merchants are busy with a won derful fall business. It is a six-day business now and not crowded into Saturdays as is the case during the summer. This excellent fall busi ness is due to the harvest season with cotton, the county’s princlpa money crop, on the move to market. The First National bank received in deposits bn Monday of this week approximately $423,000 which reg istered a peak day for this institu tion. This gives some idea as to trade conditions and the movement of money at this season of the year. Gins are running night and day and even then farmers are having to wait at the gins for hours at a time to get their cotton ginned. Cot ton warehouses are gradually fill ing up and every channel of busi ness seems to have taken on new life. Masons Meet Tonight. An Important meeting of the members of the Masonic lodge will be held tonight to consider some real estate holdings of the lodge. Man Near Death Here As Result Of Wreck | Carolina Mountains Are Snow-Capped Asheville.—At least three Western North Carolina peaks Wednesday and Thursday were covered with a blanket of snow, contrasting with the bright October sun that beamed on Asheville. . Roan Mountain and Grassy Baldln, in Avery county, and Wayah Bald in Macon, were covered Tuesday and Tuesday night, it was learned here. In this connection, it was re called here that the heaviest snow of the winter of 1923 felt exactly six years ago—Octo ber 23. Civic Clubs Plan Drive For Scouts President Atkins And Treasurer Mack Holland Of Gastonia Speak Here. Oliver Anthony has been made general chairman tor the campaign to be launched on Tuesday Novem ber 5 to raise Shelby’s quota to maintain the Piedmont scout coun cil and last night the Ktwanis club meeting at the Hotel Charles hea’-d short speeches from President J. W Atkins and Treasurer J. M. Holland both of Gastonta, and officials of the Piedmont scout council. The civic clubs will be asked to pui. on me arive lor tunas to meet Shelby's quota and Tuesday, Nov ember 5 has been designated as Jhe day for the canvas to begin. There are 14 scout troops in the county, not counting Kings Mountain which has a separate quota. Mr Atktns points out the necessity ol encouraging scouting which meant so much to the young manhood ol today, especially at this time whm the communist party Is trying to teach American youths the com munistic ideas and ideals In an ef fort to undermine the government and its sacred institutions. Mr. Holland outlined the cam paign plan that has been success ful in the other four counties com prising the council. _ $33,034 Collected In Taxes By Sheriff Here T. M. Holland Estate In No. 2 Town ship First To Fay 1929 Taxes. I hi eight days of tax collecting I Sheriff Irvin M. Allen lias taken in $33,034.37 in Cleveland county taxes, he announced today. This total of taxes paid ran through Thursday evening. A cheek of the tax books shows that the first taxes of the year were paid by the T. M. Holland estate in No. 2 township. Lineberger, Boyer On Committees At the Western Carolina Meth&d ist conference now In session at High Point, Dr. Hugh K. Boyer, re tiring pastor of Central Methodist church here, was named on the memoirs committee to prepare pi pers honoring ministers who died during the conference year. Mr. William Lineberger, superintendent of the Central Methodist Sundry school was named a member of the conference committee on Sabbath observance. Chicago Man Shot In Mouth, Swallows Ballet, Is All Right Chicago.—Ben Friedman was shot in the face, lost three teeth, swal lowed the bullet, and didn’t even suffer indigestion. Things like that happen, but are hard to believe. Friedman, however, had evidence. The teeth were gone, the bullet was in his stomach. Friedman, 42 years old, was step ping out of a West Madison street restaurant Tuesday night. A man rushed at him, pushed a pistol into Friedman's face and pulled the trigger. Then the fellow ran- awe;/ and never was caught. Friedman yelled, the ambulan > arrived, he was taken to the hoe’.i - tal. Doctors began looking for •Jit buUet and finally found it in Fried. man’s stomach. The bullet had tak en three teeth from Friedman’s lower Jaw then, its force spent, had gone harmlessly—the doctors said down the Friedman esophagus when Friedman, quite naturally In view of everything, gulped. Two Families Move To Hotel Charles Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Short tnd daughter, Patsy, and Mr. and Mrs, , Charlie Williams, who had 6em ving at the Cleveland Springs el. have moved to the Hotel liafles since the fire and will make their honie there for the win ter. Young Gaffney Man Perhaps fw tally Injured In Car Craah Near Muoresboro. Clyde Harris, young white man <4 Gaffney, is in the Shelby hospital at the point of death as the residf of serious Injuries received yester* day afternoon when the car to j which he was riding turned ovef : just on this side of Mooresborn ott | Highway 3d.' Boyce Cash, of the section b* | tween Oaffney and Orover, who wad | driving the car, is also In the hos pital with a mashed leg but is ooi thought to be seriously injured. At Foot Of Grade. The two young men, in a borrow ! ed car. according to Cash were ed | route to Forest City to visit a rela tive of the badly injured man. The^ coasted down the Sandy Bun creels hill and just as he let the clutch out Cash\says something about the car seemed to lock, swerving the car to the side of the road and as he tried to right it the automobile turned completely over. Harris was thrown out of the car. through the glass of the coupe, but Cash, the driver, was penned underneath until a Mr, Powell, who operates a service sta tion nearby, extricated him. Tile two injured men. Harris, un conscious, were placed in a passing truck and rushed to the hospital here. State Highway PatroUnau R. S. Harris led the fast dash on hU motorcycle clearing the traffic fa# the truck. •%«.. One Side Paralysed. Harris was given immediate merit* cal treatment by hdspital surgeons, but it was stated today that hla skull was fractured and that hla left side was paralysed. He has been unconscious since being brought ta the hospital, and surgeons hold very little hope for hi» recovery, flash may be able to leave the hospital today or tomorrow. Officers last night got in touch with the injured man's mother af Rutherfordton and she came herd to be at her son’s bedside Whiskey, officers say, may have been responcible for the wreck al though people about the hospital when the two were brought to say that Cash, the driver, did not seem , to have been under the influence I of an intoxicant. A bottle, which, by the odor, undoubtedly had eou- / tatned whiskey was found in dTif7 of Harris' pockets smashed to es. Cline Agent For Chrysler D. 11. Cline Takes Up Agency lid Chrysler Cars In This Territory. D. H. Cline Hudson-Essex deal er, has taken the Chrysler agency, heretofore held here by the Litton Motor company. This agency con nection was made this week afc<* Mr. Cline has already stocked a number of late model Chrysler 86, 70 and 77 cars. He will maintain the agency at his Hudson-Srsox headquarters on West Warren 8t. “The Chrysler agency does not mean that I am discontinuing the Hudson-Essex agencies which E have held for a number of years. I will continue to handle these cars and have simply added the Chry sler cars to my line and will con tinue to give Chrysler service to cars already running," said Mr. Cline. Shelby Gets Jolt In Market Stampede | Majority Local Investors Cling To Stock And Are Not Sold Out. The worst stampede in history which swept the New York stock exchange yesterday, sending stocks down in a greater panic than any time since the war decline of 1914, was keenly felt in Shelby among scores of local investors on the ex j change. >• ! Insofar as can be learned herd today the stock stampede brought about no actual losses during the day for local investors as Use ma jority of them margined their hold ings and clung on with the hope of a reverse movement, none being sold out on the decline However, many suffered lasses by the decline which they hope to recoup on a , climbing market^